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De Forest "Wireless System Responder," ca. 1903

Lee de Forest (1873-1961)1903/1904

History San José

History San José
San Jose, United States

This circa 1903 "spade" responder (or electrolytic detector) is one of the best examples of Lee de Forest's several costly attempts to work around Marconi's and Fessenden's patents. A variant of Fessenden's electrolytic detector, it uses a flat piece of platinum leaf  sealed into glass instead of Fessenden's platinum wire. De Forest's detector soon became standard quipment in de Forest wireless stations as well as U.S. Navy receivers. Fessenden successfuly sued de Forest, but by then de Forest had moved on to crystal detectors. Switches and/or knobs on top of the radio are labeled: Potentiometer, Battery, Shunt and Telephone. De Forest exhibited this apparatus as part of his display at the 1904 St. Louis World's Fair, along with a 300 foot high "De Forest Wireless Telegraph Tower."

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  • Title: De Forest "Wireless System Responder," ca. 1903
  • Creator: Lee de Forest (1873-1961)
  • Date: 1903/1904
  • Physical Dimensions: 6.5 x 7 x 7.5 in.
  • Provenance: Perham Collection of Early Electronics, History San José
  • Type: physical object
  • Contributor: American de Forest Wireless Telegraph Company
History San José

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